Monday, April 29, 2024

BACH FLOWER REMEDY

INTRODUCTION :
Bach Flower Essences or Mother tinctures are easily available in Major cities like,NewDelhi, Mumbai,Bengluru,Kolkata, Ahmedabad, PUNE,Goa, Puducherry, Kerala,etc... All India locally seen major stockists in Homeopathic medicine stores,and by AMAZON courier despatch (details as seen in respective BFR Rescue Remedies in AMAZON PLAYSTORE app.) 

You may e-mail us(ONLY in Mumbai residents mail their Emotional Referencing States solving Query Questions). Email id=   yads2008@gmail.com,... 
WhatsApp=(+91)-7045874077 (ONLY EMERGENCY MESSAGES ,NO CALLS) we are attending client's on same number.

What are BACH FLOWER REMEDY ?
BACH FLOWER REMEDY,was made originally by Prof.(Dr.) Edward Bach, Mount Vernon U.K. They were sourced from the wildly growing HERBS studied by Dr.Bach.,and categorized to treatment of Emotions via Depressed Mind States and turnaround positive emotions remedies were helpful.

What is the BACH FLOWER REMEDY DOSAGES ?
 Generally, 2 to 4 drops in SINGLE herb related query.
BACH Flower Remedy is totally and 100% Safe,as it is pure and simple obtained from the Original BACH FLOWER REMEDY designed for your personal ONLY flower's sourced are then Essences extracted by Homeopathic Pharmacies like,NewLife BACH FLOWER REMEDY, Bhandari BACH FLOWER REMEDY,etc..and from Bengaluru Homeopathy Stockists.So if ordering on-line you will have to check-out their websites.

HOW TO USE BACH FLOWER REMEDY ?
In combination with other BFR you are to take it ,4-6 drops, directly mix these drops  in Fruit juices, and/or before you travel within Bisleri or Aquaguard Water or Milton water bottle. Then you may sip two to three water-sips(mouthfuls) as and whenever needed.The BACH FLOWER REMEDY drops,as sourced from your BACH FLOWER REMEDY Certified Therapist / Practitioner,or from ABOVE mentioned (7045874077)no calls WhatsApp number.

Can I take BACH FLOWER REMEDY with Allopathic medicine ?
Yes, BACH FLOWER REMEDY is 100% safety,as only flowers Essences extracted without anything extras ,so you get purest purity and BENEFITS ALWAYS 🌹☮️🌹👆

So, it's not having any side effects (whence sourced from Originally made U.K.Bach Flower Remedy Mother tinctures 30ml or 20ml Pre-packaged,sold by AMAZON India websites listings). 

YOUR Family Physician given medicines to you can be taken with BACH FLOWER REMEDY,as these are colourless tasteless ONLY flower drops. 

Since,1930s no problem seen with anyone who has taken Allopathic, Medicine,Unani medication,and Ayurveda syrups ; mixed with BACH FLOWER REMEDY,2-4 drops( or directly by dropper, sourced from 10ml Amber glass bottle) BACH FLOWER REMEDY preparations.Generally,even the WHO has approved to BACH FLOWER REMEDY,U.K. and is now seen widely in usages by Australia,Japan,France, Germany, Singapore, Malaysia,India,Middle-East countries. Some European large Malls like , Walmart too have dedicated counters selling it.



( All References for Educational Uses,Courtesy Credited: Wikipedia, Edward Bach picture credit courtesy Book cover,"HEAL THYSELF: EDWARD BACH,as referenced from Amazon India.)
Bach nosodes
Starting in 1919, he worked at the London Homeopathic Hospital, where he was influenced by the work of Samuel Hahnemann.[1] In this period, he developed seven bacterial nosodes known as the seven Bach nosodes. Their use has been mostly confined to British homeopathy practitioners.
These bowel nosodes[7] were introduced by Bach and the British homeopath John Paterson (1890–1954)[8] and Charles Edwin Wheeler (1868–1946)[9] in the 1920s. Their use is based on the variable bowel bacterial flora associated with persons of different homeopathic constitutional types.[10]
Bach flower remedies
Main article: Bach flower remedies
In 1930, at the age of 43, he decided to search for a new healing technique. He spent the spring and summer discovering and preparing new flower remedies – which include no part of the plant but simply what Bach claimed to be the pattern of energy of the flower. In the winter he treated patients free of charge.
Rather than being based on medical research, using the scientific method, Bach's flower remedies were intuitively derived[11] and based on his perceived psychic connections to the plants.[1] If he felt a negative emotion, he would hold his hand over different plants, and if one alleviated the emotion, he would ascribe the power to heal that emotional problem to that plant. He believed that early morning sunlight passing through dew-drops on flower petals transferred the healing power of the flower onto the water,[12] so he would collect the dew drops from the plants and preserve the dew with an equal amount of brandy to produce a mother tincture which would be further diluted before use.[13] Later, he found that the amount of dew he could collect was not sufficient, so he would suspend flowers in spring water and allow the sun's rays to pass through them.[12]
While he recognised the role of the germ theory of disease, defective organs and/or tissue, and other known and demonstrable sources of disease, Bach wondered how exposure to a pathogen could make one person sick, while another was unaffected, when to all appearances and analysis they were in equal states of health. He postulated that illness was the result of a conflict between the purposes of the soul and the personality's actions and outlooks. This internal war, according to Bach, leads to emotional imbalances and energetic blockage, which causes a lack of harmony, thus leading to physical diseases. Bach's remedies focus on treatment of the patient's personality, which he believed to be the ultimate root cause of disease.
The Bach Centre
The Bach Centre house, Mount Vernon, in Brightwell-cum-Sotwell, Oxfordshire, is owned today by a Registered Charity controlled by the Ramsell family set up by John Ramsell in 1989.[6][5]
References
  1. a b c Wood, Matthew (2000). Vitalism: The History of Herbalism, Homeopathy, and Flower Essences. North Atlantic Books. p. 185186. ISBN 978-1-55643-340-5.
  2. ^ Hutton, Frankie (1 January 1955). Rose Lore: Essays in Semiotics and Cultural History. Lexington Books. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-7391-3015-5.
  3. a b Staff writer (19 December 1936). "Edward Bach, M.B. Lond". The Lancet. 228 (5912): 1492. doi​:​10.1016/S0140-6736(00)82157-1​.
  4. ^ Mechthild Scheffer (2001). The Encyclopedia of Bach Flower Therapy. Rochester, Vermont: Healing Arts Press. pp. 13–15.
  5. a b http://www.bachcentre.com/centre/faq.htm
  6. a b http://www.bachcentre.com/disclaimer.php
  7. ^ John Paterson The Bowel Nosodes
  8. ^ John PATERSON (1890–1954)​PHOTOTHÈQUE HOMÉOPATHIQUE Homéopathe International
  9. ^ Charles Edwin Wheeler PHOTOTHÈQUE HOMÉOPATHIQUE Homéopathe International
  10. ^ Prescribing on the basis of Nosodes & Bowel Nosodes Homoeopathy Clinic website
  11. ^ Graham, Helen (1999). Complementary Therapies in Context: The Psychology of Healing. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. pp. 254ISBN 1-85302-640-9.
  12. a b Larimore, Walt; O'Mathuna, Donal (2007). Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook, Updated and Expanded (Christian Handbook). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-310-26999-1.
  13. ^ Robson, Terry (2004). An Introduction to Complementary Medicine. Allen & Unwin Academic. pp. 184–185. ISBN 1-74114-054-4.
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